The Knee Plays

Originally conceived as one part of Robert Wilson's ambitious, avant-garde opera The CIVIL warS, this 1984 work is being issued for the first time on CD, with the addition of eight previously unreleased tracks and dense liner notes by David Byrne himself.

The CIVIL warS: A Tree Is Best Measured When It Is Down was set to be experimental theatre director Robert Wilson's most massive
achievement to date. Best known at the time for his 1976 five-hour operatic collaboration with Philip
Glass, Einstein on the Beach, Wilson was leading troupes
from six countries in the production of CIVIL warS, a 12-hour avant-garde
opera that would premiere at the 1984 Olympic Games in Los Angeles. Although Wilson lost funding before
staging the full production, several
smaller versions of the play were individually performed around the world. "The Knee Plays", the American
contribution scored by David Byrne, premiered in Minneapolis in April 1984, and
had its vinyl release on avant-jazz label ECM the next year.

"Knee Plays" is Wilson's own term, contrived to describe the
connective vignettes that link the larger sections of a production,
allowing for set and costume changes.
Byrne signed on to produce the interstitials for CIVIL warS, and his
subsequent performances have been comprised solely of the adjoining sections,
which hold together rather well-- as well as one of Wilson's non-narratives can,
at least. Nonesuch's current
release of Knee Plays-- for the first time on CD-- adds eight previously unreleased tracks and a dense recollection of the
pair's mind-meld by Byrne himself.

In many ways, a collaboration between Byrne and Wilson was
perfect. Most obviously, Byrne's
work with Twyla Tharp and Jonathan Demme on The Catherine Wheel and Stop Making Sense, respectively, indicated a keen interest in similar sorts of
theatre, as well as the ability to pull off a collaboration with often wonderful
results. The pair's stylistic and procedural similarities run deep as well: Both Byrne
and Wilson had gained reknown by mastering the use of patient, tourettically
clipped and repetitive phrases and gestures; they also shared a fascination
with antisociality (at times, mental illness) and the mundane realities of
everyday life. They even looked similar, in a tall, geekily dashing sort of way.

Originally envisioning a Japanese drum ensemble, Byrne instead opted for music more in the vein of New Orleans' Dirty Dozen
Brass Band-- a perfect fit for a play inspired by the Civil War and scored by
Byrne, at this point seemingly fascinated by all art with strong cultural
resonances. From the opening track,
"Tree (Today Is an Important Occasion)" to the quintessentially Byrnian spoken-word closer
"In the Future", the music is variously light, dramatic, authoritative, and
empathetic. Byrne's
ethnomusicological streak in full force, several sections of his score were adapted from
traditional music: "In the Upper
Room", "Social Studies (The Gift of Sound)", and "Things to Do (I've Tried)" are faithful gospel adaptations,
and "Theadora Is Dozing" comes from the Bulgarian folk tradition.

Byrne, like Wilson, treats simple behaviors with the utmost
delicacy and curiosity. In the essay included with the Nonesuch re-release, Byrne discusses his decision to
accompany the music with narration (by himself, of course) as part
of the Dadaist and Surrealist traditions: "None of these (text pieces) was
directly related to Bob's 'story' and they were certainly unrelated to the
stage action...to 'illustrate' things that are happening on stage with music or
text is redundant." Anyone
familiar with the liner notes to Stop Making Sense will recognize the narration over "Upper Room", for
instance: "Being in the theater is more important than knowing what is going on
in the movie." Similarly, "Things to Do" is a numbered to-do list ("Number 25. Putting houses next to bumpy
things/ Number 26. Shaking things next to other things"), and both "Tree" and
"Social Studies" approach everyday activities from the perspective of a stranger to Western culture. The most successful of these is the
original closer "In the Future", on which Byrne shows off his knack at predicting
technological and social trends, ending with "In the future there will be so
much going on that no one will be able to keep track of it." That statement
seems applicable to most any historical era, but who's quibbling? He's right.

The most striking characteristic of The Knee Plays reflects the most overlooked quality shared by Byrne
and Wilson.Both artists are
deeply invested in appeals to their audiences' most basic human sympathies, yet
their approaches are often misunderstood as cold by those who can't meet the
work on its own terms.Extracted from its theatrical roots, Byrne's score holds up remarkably well, a testament to his
unique vision at the time of its composition-- coming at the end of one of pop
music's most fascinating creative streaks.